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Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants

Bioengineering of tissues and organs has the potential to generate functional replacement organs. However, achieving the full-thickness vascularization that is required for long-term survival of living implants has remained a grand challenge, especially for clinically sized implants. During the pre-...

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Autores principales: Farzin, Ali, Hassan, Shabir, Teixeira, Liliana S. Moreira, Gurian, Melvin, Crispim, João F., Manhas, Varun, Carlier, Aurélie, Bae, Hojae, Geris, Liesbet, Noshadi, Iman, Shin, Su Ryon, Leijten, Jeroen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8680410/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34924912
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202100850
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author Farzin, Ali
Hassan, Shabir
Teixeira, Liliana S. Moreira
Gurian, Melvin
Crispim, João F.
Manhas, Varun
Carlier, Aurélie
Bae, Hojae
Geris, Liesbet
Noshadi, Iman
Shin, Su Ryon
Leijten, Jeroen
author_facet Farzin, Ali
Hassan, Shabir
Teixeira, Liliana S. Moreira
Gurian, Melvin
Crispim, João F.
Manhas, Varun
Carlier, Aurélie
Bae, Hojae
Geris, Liesbet
Noshadi, Iman
Shin, Su Ryon
Leijten, Jeroen
author_sort Farzin, Ali
collection PubMed
description Bioengineering of tissues and organs has the potential to generate functional replacement organs. However, achieving the full-thickness vascularization that is required for long-term survival of living implants has remained a grand challenge, especially for clinically sized implants. During the pre-vascular phase, implanted engineered tissues are forced to metabolically rely on the diffusion of nutrients from adjacent host-tissue, which for larger living implants results in anoxia, cell death, and ultimately implant failure. Here it is reported that this challenge can be addressed by engineering self-oxygenating tissues, which is achieved via the incorporation of hydrophobic oxygen-generating micromaterials into engineered tissues. Self-oxygenation of tissues transforms anoxic stresses into hypoxic stimulation in a homogenous and tissue size-independent manner. The in situ elevation of oxygen tension enables the sustained production of high quantities of angiogenic factors by implanted cells, which are offered a metabolically protected pro-angiogenic microenvironment. Numerical simulations predict that self-oxygenation of living tissues will effectively orchestrate rapid full-thickness vascularization of implanted tissues, which is empirically confirmed via in vivo experimentation. Self-oxygenation of tissues thus represents a novel, effective, and widely applicable strategy to enable the vascularization living implants, which is expected to advance organ transplantation and regenerative medicine applications.
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spelling pubmed-86804102022-10-14 Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants Farzin, Ali Hassan, Shabir Teixeira, Liliana S. Moreira Gurian, Melvin Crispim, João F. Manhas, Varun Carlier, Aurélie Bae, Hojae Geris, Liesbet Noshadi, Iman Shin, Su Ryon Leijten, Jeroen Adv Funct Mater Article Bioengineering of tissues and organs has the potential to generate functional replacement organs. However, achieving the full-thickness vascularization that is required for long-term survival of living implants has remained a grand challenge, especially for clinically sized implants. During the pre-vascular phase, implanted engineered tissues are forced to metabolically rely on the diffusion of nutrients from adjacent host-tissue, which for larger living implants results in anoxia, cell death, and ultimately implant failure. Here it is reported that this challenge can be addressed by engineering self-oxygenating tissues, which is achieved via the incorporation of hydrophobic oxygen-generating micromaterials into engineered tissues. Self-oxygenation of tissues transforms anoxic stresses into hypoxic stimulation in a homogenous and tissue size-independent manner. The in situ elevation of oxygen tension enables the sustained production of high quantities of angiogenic factors by implanted cells, which are offered a metabolically protected pro-angiogenic microenvironment. Numerical simulations predict that self-oxygenation of living tissues will effectively orchestrate rapid full-thickness vascularization of implanted tissues, which is empirically confirmed via in vivo experimentation. Self-oxygenation of tissues thus represents a novel, effective, and widely applicable strategy to enable the vascularization living implants, which is expected to advance organ transplantation and regenerative medicine applications. 2021-07-06 2021-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8680410/ /pubmed/34924912 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202100850 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Farzin, Ali
Hassan, Shabir
Teixeira, Liliana S. Moreira
Gurian, Melvin
Crispim, João F.
Manhas, Varun
Carlier, Aurélie
Bae, Hojae
Geris, Liesbet
Noshadi, Iman
Shin, Su Ryon
Leijten, Jeroen
Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants
title Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants
title_full Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants
title_fullStr Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants
title_full_unstemmed Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants
title_short Self-Oxygenation of Tissues Orchestrates Full-Thickness Vascularization of Living Implants
title_sort self-oxygenation of tissues orchestrates full-thickness vascularization of living implants
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8680410/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34924912
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202100850
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